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Looks like lots of Holes

Bill

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Timing Is Everything

For several years, meat industry groups that recognized the huge complexities and costs mCOOL would mandate -- with little benefit for customers -- have staved off implementation.

However, Democratic control of Congress and export difficulties in China have dramatically changed the politics. Recent negotiations during Farm Bill markup demonstrated what a difference a year makes.

The result -- at least the first step -- is Farm Bill language that implements a somewhat revised version of mCOOL.

These seeds of change were sown over recent years, as a Republican Congress angered enough voters that Democrats won control of Congress -- and committee chairmanships. That put Rep. Collin Peterson (D-MN) in power, representing a liberal party that favors more government control over business. When Peterson was announced as committee chairman, we noted that his re- election campaign event concluded with a big reception in the National Farmer's Union tent.

Therefore, it came as no surprise that when invitations to testify before the Ag Committee on the Farm Bill came out, the National Farmer's Union (NFU) and Center for Rural Affairs were given center stage. They espoused more government controls, limits on cattle ownership, penalties for growth and businesslike behavior, and more government involvement in setting prices.*

Favoring mandatory COOL in his testimony, NFU President Tom Buis demonstrated his totally inadequate grasp of the situation by testifying that if fish -- who have neither ears nor eartags -- can be subjected to mCOOL, then 1,000-lb. steers shouldn't be a problem.

He totally ignored the complexities of carrying the identity of that (out-of-date-sized) steer through processing onto roughly 300 individual packages.

Peterson assigned three people to closet themselves with committee staff and hammer out some kind of compromise -- something not on the dance card in previous years. Two of those three were NFU people: "Fish ears" Buis and NFU lobbyist Bart Chilton. The third person, Randy Russell, represented the Meat Promotion Coalition, a group that recognizes the value of industry segments serving the consumer and not destroying efficiency by making life difficult for each other.

The Coaltion included producer associations -- like NCBA and the National Pork Producers Council - and processor associations like AMI & NMA and processing firms. These groups are trying to avoid inflicting mCOOL on everyone back to cow/calf producers.

Then there was China. As the Ag Committee worked, the FDA's congressional oversight subcommittee held hearings on import inspection and China's export control. Seriously concerned about a key linchpin of its economy, China had already executed the head of its food and drug agency for malfeasance. However, unprecedented episodes involving safety failures in pet food and other items triggered congressional concern over the origin of food products -- even though country-of-origin does not solve the question of food safety, affect food production in any country or provide food inspection.

Of course, Congress is not noted for matching solutions with problems. But heck, they are terrific at solving problems that don't exist. So it's puzzling that when the group huddled to produce mCOOL revisions, that other group noted for "solving" non-existent problems, R-CALF, was nowhere in evidence. Mr. Bullard was observed sitting on a siding in an overflow room. :oops: :shock:

Nevertheless, the China issue was visible enough that appearing to do something was a concern for Congress. So ... a different stage with different players than one year ago.

What did the "closet-eers" hammer out? In general, the agreement softened definitions, so that neither packers nor producers are required to maintain anything beyond "normal business records." USDA would still have audit authority to examine those normal business records, like animal health papers, import documents and producer affidavits. Additionally, fines for retailers were reduced to $1,000 per violation.

Possible package labels could include one called "Multiple Countries of Origin," which would list "all of the countries in which the animal may have been born, raised or slaughtered." Another would be called "Imported for Immediate Slaughter," which would require the label to list the country of export and country of slaughter (U.S.). Ground beef could be labeled with a list "of all reasonably possible countries of origin."

This compromise reduces -- to some extent -- cost and liability for the beef chain. However, it still costs huge sums the industry doesn't have, provides no useful consumer information, and achieves none of the food safety goals proponents espouse.

*AFF Sentinel issues Sen. V4 #14-#17
 
Bill-- Dittmer didn't also say that one of his and his packers number one Congressional flunkies got booted by his home folk last time-- and the folks of the country took Goodlatte out of being the #1 man...

Looks to me like the people have spoken!!!And they have put the rule back to the way it originally was intended back in 2002 before USDA began screwing with it for the Packers....


----------------------------------------------------------------------

DJ New Meat Origin Bill In US Seeks To Minimize Industry Costs



6:01 PM, July 23, 2007

By Bill Tomson

Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

Agriculture Online



WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--New U.S. legislation to require country-of-origin

labels on retail beef, pork and lamb is designed to prevent costly paperwork

that the industry fears current rules would create.



The legislation, in the form of an amendment set to be added to the U.S.

House version of the 2007 farm bill, would prohibit the U.S. Department of

Agriculture from requiring members of the industry to keep any more

documentation than they already do.



"The (USDA) may not require a person that prepares, stores, handles or

distributes (meat) to maintain a record of the country of origin of (meat)

other than those maintained in the course of the normal conduct of the business

of such person," according to a copy of the legislation obtained by Dow Jones

Newswires.



The legislation is scheduled to be added to the farm bill this week and voted

on in the House as early as Thursday. Country-of-origin labeling rules for meat

products were signed into law several years ago, but implementation has been

repeatedly postponed. The current deadline for implementation is September

2008.



The USDA would be able to conduct audits to verify the country of origin for

meat products under the new legislation, but those who prepare, handle, store

or distribute meat can offer several different kinds of documents - including

"producer affidavits" - to prove where the meat came from.


And fines for non-compliance could only be levied if a company "willfully"

violated the rules, and then only after a USDA hearing.



The legislation - a compromise between beef packers, who oppose mandatory

origin labels, and some cattle ranchers who believe it is best to distinguish

their product from foreign imports - was brokered last week during debate on

the farm bill by House Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson, D-Minn.



Peterson, commenting on the labeling agreement after debate wrapped up late

Thursday night, said: "We've simplified and reduced the penalties and reduced

the paperwork and the requirements...so that it's going to make it much easier

to comply with the law and...made it a more realistic situation."


The compromise legislation also creates new categories of labels that address

how to designate products such as ground beef that may contain material from

multiple countries.



Meat that is labeled as U.S. origin must be "exclusively born, raised and

slaughtered in the United States
,"
according to the legislation. Labels for

ground beef, pork or lamb, must list "all reasonably possible countries of

origin."
 
NCBA is taking the credit for it now. Also this in funny, they are the ones that were pushing for M'ID with cool.

The version of COOL approved by the House Ag Committee will distinguish beef as cattle exclusively of foreign origin, cattle exclusively of U.S. origin and beef from cattle born in another country but fed and processed in the United States. The measure greatly eases NCBA members' concern that proving the origin of their cattle would require burdensome record-keeping.
 

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